July 22, 2010

Truncated analysis: Shakti Met dor

About
Shakti Met Dor is a leading manufacturer of steel doors since 1995. The company was established primarily to manufacture steel doors, windows, and other building material products to cater to the construction industry. Shakti has expanded its facility to 180,000 Sq.ft of manufacturing and warehouse space capable of producing 300,000 doors and frames. Shakti has seven sales and marketing branches across the major metropolitan cities in India.

Financials
The company is in a niche business and has done fairly well in the last 8-10 years. The ROE has been maintained in excess of 20% with the recent drop due to new CAPEX and higher receivables. The Debt levels have gone up due to the new capacity and due to high additions to accounts receivables in the current year.

The inventory turns has remained at around 10 turns per year and the working capital turns in range of 3.5-4 which seems the reasonable. The total asset turns are at 2.3 which is likely to improve to around 3 with the capex being completed in the last one year.
The one key area of concern is the increase in accounts receivables which is now at around 150 days. I think this needs to be watched closely over the next few years.

Positives
The company operates in a profitable niche and has been able to scale up well in the last few years. The company has been able to deliver a topline growth in excess 20% in the last 10 years and bottom line growth (inspite of the recent drop) in roughly the same range.

The company has recently completed its capex cycle and with the growth in the construction, IT and other user industries, should be able to grow well. In addition the profit margins are likely to improve in the next few years, if the company is able to reduce the debt load and control the raw material costs. The improvement is not a given, but based on the past performance likely to happen.

Risks
There are several key risks in the business. The number one risk is the delisting plan of the company (see
here). The management plans to delist the company and has offered around 195/ share. The management holds 56% of the company and needs 34% more to delist. Around 100 shareholders (including the promoters) hold around 90% of the company. I do not have details of these shareholders, but if the management has an informal agreement with them, then the delisting may happen at the proposed price. The minority shareholders holding 10% of the stock will not matter much in the reverse book building process.

A consent order was passed by SEBI on non-compliance of the company of the Substantial Acquisition of Shares and Takeovers Regulations in June 2010. It seems the promoters were acquiring the shares from the market since 1998 and have not disclosed it. This information is missing from the annual reports till 2008-2009. I think this does not inspire confidence

The other risk is the increase in the accounts receivables. This may not be as much as risk as the last quarter of 2010 has seen a sudden increase in topline and hence the year end numbers could be inflated due to that. However one has to watch this number closely as the debt more than 6 months doubled in 2009 and the total debt has increased further in 2010. This increases the risk of bad debt write-offs in the future.


Management quality checklist
- Management compensation: On the higher side. Management compensation is around 12% of net profit
- Capital allocation record: Has been sensible and good till date.
- Shareholder communication – Not good. The management has not been transparent in their communication (see the point on risks above)
- Accounting practice – Seems fine for most part with all the mandatory disclosures in the latest AR.
- Conflict of interest – None in the notes to account. However see the risks section for such incidents.
- Performance track record – Good from a business performance perspective. Corporate governance standards have not been satisfactory.

Conclusion
I started this analysis a few days back and was impressed with the fundamentals. On looking through the BSE filing, I noticed the delisting notice from the company and was thinking of this as an arbitrage or long term opportunity. However the nature of the shareholding (thanks to ninad for pointing that out), I have concerns on how the delisting will work out for the minority shareholder. In addition, some of the past actions do not inspire confidence.

As I discussed in the last post, my valuation template has a checklist which I go through before doing a more detailed analysis on the company. On running through the checklist, I have come across the risks mentioned earlier in this post. I am not too comfortable with those risks and hence inspite of good fundamentals have decided to drop this idea.

Note: If you hold the stock and don’t think the above issues are material enough, it may be so. However I am more conservative and don’t want to put my money on the line to test it out.

8 comments:

Pradeep said...

I just read this post in this blog: http://www.indianvalueinvestors.com/2010/07/whats-your-style.html and could not but remember your earlier post: http://valueinvestorindia.blogspot.com/2008/10/warren-buffett-or-rakesh-jhunjhunwala.html

It is a rip off without acknowledging the source. Though you might not bother about it, I was just intrigued!!

BTW, Are you looking at real estate companies now? They seem to be undervalued.

rayhaan said...

hey rohit , saw a write up on this stock on dalaal-street. com looks like a case f friends of a feather!anyways hope u can chek out bnk capital-marketable securities of around 135 crores ,low debt and big promoter holding but mkt cap of 40 crores or so(copied this from dalaal -street)
also teesta agro a t group stock with 14 crores of cash but 9 crores of mkt cap,low debt and a promoter holding of 36 percent
sandesh too looks good with 80 crores of fixed deposits and 200 crores of mkt cap.it is gujrats no.2 newspaper, u know free cashflow biz type!!!!!!(also the promoters did a share buyback wen it matteredmost in 2008)
hoping not to hijack ur blog,
rayhaan
(wish i had listened to u on temptation foods, they recently sold 62%of the company at a pittance) :(

Rohit Chauhan said...

hi pradeep
as long as the content is not copied, even if the topic and substance is similar , i cannot call it a rip off

i have not looked at real estate companies. have been concerned with the ethics of the biz ..difficult to trust promoters in it

rgds
rohit

Rohit Chauhan said...

hi rayhaan
ayush who writes daalal-street is a good friend and very smart investor. we talk frequently and share ideas. you should follow his blog ..he comes up with great ideas

i have seen sandesh and found the promoters lacking in governance and hence gave the company a pass.

did not understand on temptation foods ..what happened in that company ?

rgds
rohit

rayhaan said...

u sure have awesum friends rohit!!
q1. could u pls underline the governance issues which proved to be a turn off for u because i consder the company to be pretty attractive at these levels?
q2.what are ur views on teesta agro which is selling below its cash ?
q3.recently i observed a few psu banks selling below their deposits(or as i saw below cash and cash equivalents in the cashflow statement).do u think they might present investment oppurtunities?

as u rightly pointed out a few months ago tf does have serious management issues. i was rudely awakened to this, when recently the company had a qip in which they sold a company which had sales of rs500 per share approx and an eps of rs25 at the price of rs 36(im still holding on to the shares as they represent rs 300 of sales and an eps of 12 approx even now). what a shareholder friendly management which sells off 62% of the company for a pittance!

rayhaan said...

p.s
TO ALL THOSE WHO FEEL SHAKTI MET ANALYSIS IS A COPY- PASTE OF DALAAL-STREET .com
1)guys, lets face it rohit 's analysis is way more pessimistic than ayush's ! 2)there 's no such thing as copyright /patents on discovering stocks.
Let d sunshine in ,guys

Rohit Chauhan said...

Hi rayhaan
the analysis is not a copy paste, but i do follow several blogs like that of ninad, ayush and others looking for ideas.

we talk to each other on these ideas and exchange views ..but do our own independent thinking.

i maybe more pessimistic on the stock, but you should not ignore ayush's analysis ..he does an extremely good and thorough job of analysing and discovering great ideas

rgds
rohit

Anonymous said...

Rohit, I think you made a good call in staying away from this investment. Governance issues abound. It appears the company is still well short of the required shares to ensure delisting.